The Facts About Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

Transcription

1 The Facts About Medical Malpractice in Kentucky Congress Watch February 2004

2 Acknowledgments The principal authors of The Facts About Medical Malpractice in Kentucky were Public Citizen s Congress Watch Research Director Neal Pattison, working in collaboration with Congress Watch Director Frank Clemente and Legislative Counsel Jackson Williams. Significant research contributions were made by Special Counsel Barry Boughton and Senior Researcher Taylor Lincoln. About Public Citizen Public Citizen is a 160,000 member non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C., with 1,000 members in Kentucky. We represent consumer interests through lobbying, litigation, research and public education. Founded by Ralph Nader in 1971, Public Citizen fights for consumer rights in the marketplace, safe and affordable health care, campaign finance reform, fair trade, clean and safe energy sources, and corporate and government accountability. Public Citizen has five divisions and is active in every public forum: Congress, the courts, governmental agencies and the media. Congress Watch is one of the five divisions. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 215 Pennsylvania Ave. S.E. Washington, D.C P: F: Public Citizen. All rights reserved.

5 Executive Summary The American Medical Association (AMA) last year declared Kentucky to be a crisis state when it comes to the malpractice liability system. Matching the AMA s alarmist tone, the Kentucky Medical Association has issued warnings about a state of continuous crisis, which it says threatens to limit patient access to care. It is understandable that doctors are concerned by increases in medical malpractice insurance costs. Nobody wants to see physicians forced to pay more to insure themselves, even if they are highly paid specialists who earn hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. It is essential, however, that discussions of public policy and attempts to address the issue of medical liability insurance be based on solid facts, not a false sense of crisis generated to serve special interests. The strident tone used to discuss medical malpractice in Kentucky mirrors comments made on the national level, including claims by President Bush that junk and frivolous lawsuits have become one of the major cost drivers in the delivery of health care. (In fact, the Congressional Budget Office reports that costs associated with medical malpractice insurance represent less than 2 percent of the nation s health care costs.) Like the AMA and many state medical associations including the Kentucky Medical Association the president advocates a $250,000 cap on the amount that injured patients can receive for a lifetime of pain and suffering known as non-economic damages. In seeking to limit the legal rights of injured patients, physician groups and their political allies are essentially blaming those patients and their lawyers for the temporary spike in some insurance premiums. While proponents of such legislation argue that litigation and payouts have caused a spike in malpractice insurance premiums and while they suggest that insurance costs are forcing doctors out of business this report demonstrates that these claims are not supported by reliable data. The real long-term threat to the quality of health care of Kentucky residents is the unfortunate number of preventable medical errors that are made by a small minority of the state s doctors. Rather than working to limit patient rights, the vast majority of competent, conscientious doctors could join in efforts to reduce medical mistakes and improve physician oversight in Kentucky. This Public Citizen study, which relies on statistics from numerous government agencies and other reputable sources, has two principal findings: 1) There is no overall medical malpractice lawsuit problem in Kentucky the median payouts to injured patients are down significantly, the amounts health care providers pay for malpractice insurance have risen slower than inflation and there is no evidence of a doctor exodus. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 1 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

6 2) The bigger health problem in Kentucky is the considerable amount of medical malpractice that is committed by a small number of the state s doctors, many of whom go undisciplined. Other findings, based on government statistics and other reliable sources, include: Patients and consumers suffer the real costs of medical malpractice. The true impact of medical malpractice in Kentucky should be measured by the cost to patients and consumers, not the premiums paid by doctors and other health care providers to insurance companies. Extrapolating from the Institute of Medicine findings, we estimate that there are at least 632 to 1,407 preventable deaths in Kentucky hospitals each year that are due to preventable medical errors. The costs resulting from preventable medical errors to Kentucky s residents, families and communities is estimated at $244 million to $416 million each year. But the cost of medical malpractice insurance to Kentucky s health care providers is only $81.8 million a year. The amount of malpractice payouts in Kentucky declined 4.1 percent from , when adjusted for inflation. According to the federal National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB), Kentucky malpractice payouts increased 24.2 percent from 1995 to 2002, or 3.5 percent annually, while the cost of medical services increased 30.5 percent, or 4.4 percent annually during these seven years. When measured in 1995 dollars, total malpractice payouts to injured patients in Kentucky declined from $38.5 million in 1995 to $36.9 million in Kentucky s median malpractice payout in 2002 was only half what it was in In 1995, the median malpractice payout in Kentucky was $92,500, according to the NPDB. By 2002, the Kentucky median had declined to $47,500 a drop of 48.6 percent. The 2002 median payout for Kentucky was significantly lower than for preceding years, reflecting the unusual record of a single physician who made 76 payouts totaling $947,500. If payouts by this one physician were eliminated from the 2002 totals, Kentucky s median payout would have been $97,500 still only a 5.4 percent increase since 1995 at a time when medical inflation rose 30.5 percent. Million-dollar malpractice payouts have been infrequent in Kentucky. There were five payouts exceeding $1 million in 2002, compared with six such payouts in 1995, according to the NPDB. The average number of payouts of $1 million or more during the past seven years has been just 3.2 annually. Cost of malpractice insurance to Kentucky health care providers has declined slightly. Measured in 1995 dollars, health care providers paid $62.9 million for malpractice coverage in 2002, compared with $63.4 million in 1995, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. This represents a 0.8 percent decrease. During these seven years, the cost of malpractice premiums increased 29 percent from $63.4 million to $81.8 million or 4.1 percent annually. During this same period, costs of medical services increased 30 percent or 4.3 percent annually. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 2 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

7 Malpractice insurance costs comprise a small percentage of physician expenses. According to the federal government s Medicare program, doctors spend nationally an average of 63.4 percent of their practice incomes on their own salaries, 33.4 percent on such overhead as office payroll and rent, and only 3.2 percent of their practice incomes on malpractice insurance. And Kentucky doctors spend an average of only 2.8 percent of their practice incomes on malpractice insurance 12.5 percent less than the national average. Claims about doctors abandoning Kentucky are contradicted by official data. The Kentucky Medical Association has publicly claimed that Kentucky lost 819 practicing doctors during the two years ending in Official demographic statistics compiled by the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure show that there were 8,911 licensed physicians working in Kentucky in 2000, and 8,892 physicians in 2002 a difference of only 19 doctors. Furthermore, there was a decrease of 214 doctors in the populated counties of Jefferson and Fayette during those two years indicating the small decline occurred in urban areas, not in rural areas where access to doctors is a more critical issue. The ratio of doctors to residents has increased faster in Kentucky than in neighboring states. From 1985 to 2001, the ratio of physicians per 1,000 Kentucky residents rose from 1.62 to 2.33 a 43.8 percent growth in this measurement of the prevalence of doctors. In comparison, during the same period this measurement increased at a slower rate in four neighboring states of Indiana, Missouri, Ohio and Tennessee, some of which had caps on melpractice awards in place during this time. Five percent of doctors are responsible for half of Kentucky s medical malpractice payouts. According to the federal government s National Practitioner Data Bank, just 4.7 percent of Kentucky s doctors have been responsible for 49.9 percent of all malpractice payouts to patients. Overall, these 411 doctors, all of whom have made two or more payouts, have paid $171.9 million in damages since Even more surprising, just 1.6 percent of Kentucky doctors (141), each of whom has paid three or more malpractice claims, were responsible for 26.7 percent of all payouts. The vast majority of doctors have no record of malpractice payouts. In Kentucky, 83.3 percent of doctors have not made a medical malpractice payout since September 1990, when the NPDB was created. Doctors with repeated malpractice claims against them suffer few consequences. Only 9.9 percent of Kentucky doctors who made two or more malpractice payouts were disciplined by the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure, according to the NPDB. Only 12 percent of doctors who made three or more malpractice payouts were disciplined. And only 20 percent who made four or more malpractice payouts were disciplined. A cap of $250,000 on non-economic awards would have affected about 8.4 percent or fewer of the malpractice payouts made in Kentucky during In medical malpractice payouts, it is unusual for non-economic damages to comprise more than Public Citizen s Congress Watch 3 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

8 one-third to one-half of the total payout. Of 261 payouts reported to the NPDB from Kentucky for 2002, only 22 or 8.4 percent were more than $500,000 in combined economic and non-economic damages (likely to be affected by a $250,000 non-economic cap). And only 15 payouts 5.7 percent were for more than $700,000 in combined economic and non-economic damages (likely to be affected by a $350,000 non-economic cap). Such a small universe of cases make it unlikely even a draconian cap of $250,000 would affect insurance rates. Anesthesiologists experience shows patient safety efforts do more than caps to reduce lawsuits and insurance premiums. In 1985, the American Society of Anesthesiologists studied malpractice files from 35 different insurers and issued standards and procedures to avoid injuries. The resulting savings exceeded the dreams of any tort reformer. In 1972, anesthesiologists were the target of 7.9 percent of all medical malpractice claims, double their proportion among physicians. But from 1985 to 2001, they were targets of only 3.8 percent of claims. From the 1970s to the 1990s, anesthesiology claims involving permanent disability or death dropped from 64 percent to 41 percent, and claims resulting in payments to plaintiffs dropped from 64 percent to 45 percent. The increased patient safety measures paid off in savings to doctors remarkably, the average anesthesiologist s liability premium remained unchanged from 1985 to 2002 at about $18,000 (and, if adjusted for inflation, it would be a dramatic decline). The safety effort proved superior to damage caps in holding down awards. For example, during the 1990s, the median malpractice award in California, which has stringent caps, increased by 103 percent, but the median anesthesiology malpractice award remained constant. The General Accounting Office essentially found that the AMA and allied groups manufactured a crisis to push their agenda of changing medical malpractice laws. The GAO compared conditions in five AMA-designated crisis states and found that the AMA s claims that medical services were unavailable in particular areas because of malpractice costs were not reliable; and claims that the overall number of doctors in the crisis states had declined were based on questionable surveys. Claims of a crisis by Kentucky doctors should be held to the same standard of evaluation that the GAO applied to other states. Medical liability premium spikes are caused by the insurance cycle and mismanagement, not the legal system. For much of the 1990s, doctors benefited from artificially lower premiums. According to the International Risk Management Institute (IRMI), insurers were on a quest for market share driven more by the amount of premium they could book rather than the adequacy of premiums to pay losses. In large part this emphasis on market share was driven by a desire to accumulate large amounts of capital with which to turn into investment income. Medical liability premiums track investment results. An analysis by J. Robert Hunter of the Consumer Federation of America found that rates for medical malpractice insurance premiums do not track losses paid, but instead rise and fall in concert with the state of the economy. When the economy is booming and investment returns are high, Public Citizen s Congress Watch 4 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

9 companies maintain premiums at modest levels; when the economy falters and interest rates fall, companies increase premiums in response. Action could be taken on a national level to reduce medical errors. The only way to reduce the cost of medical injuries is to reduce negligence and mistakes and the best way to accomplish this is by reforming the regulatory oversight of the medical profession. Public Citizen recommends opening up the National Practitioner Data Bank to empower consumers with information about doctors who have made multiple malpractice payouts. Public Citizen also recommends implementing the systems approach advocated by the Institute of Medicine to establish mandatory nationwide error reporting systems, identify unsafe practices and raise performance standards. And Public Citizen recommends that Congress encourage better oversight of physicians through grants to state medical boards, tied to the boards agreements to meet performance standards. States should improve oversight of health-care providers. When negligent doctors are disciplined, it is rarely for inferior care. Instead, state medical boards frequently respond to more easily documented things such as prescription drug violations, fraud convictions or disciplinary actions taken in other states. Governance of physicians would improve if medical and licensing boards were required to sever formal links with state medical societies. And legislatures could help ensure that medical boards have enough revenue to hire more investigators and legal staff to perform effective oversight. State regulators could make insurance rates more predictable. J. Robert Hunter, Director of Insurance for the Consumer Federation of American, on behalf of Americans for Insurance Reform, has recommended a number of steps to state insurance regulators. These include thoroughly auditing insurance companies pricing and profitability data; regulating excessive prices; freezing stressed rates until prices and jumps in loss reserves can be analyzed; and requiring medical malpractice insurers to use claims history as a rating factor. Hunter also advocates creating a standby public insurer to write risks during hard markets, and asking the National Association of Insurance Commissioners to stop the implementation of the deregulation of commercial rates and forms, which it is unwisely pushing. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 5 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

10 Patients & Consumers Suffer the Real Costs of Medical Malpractice In 1999, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) estimated that from 44,000 to 98,000 Americans die in hospitals every year from preventable medical errors. 1 The IOM also estimated the costs to individuals, their families and society at large for these medical errors at $17 billion to $29 billion a year. These costs include disability and health care costs, lost income, lost household production and the personal costs of care. The true impact of medical malpractice in Kentucky should be measured by the cost to patients and consumers, not the premiums paid by doctors and other health care providers to their insurance companies. Extrapolating from the IOM findings, we estimate that there are at least 632 to 1,407 preventable deaths in Kentucky each year that are due to preventable medical errors. The costs resulting from preventable medical errors to Kentucky s residents, families and communities is estimated at $244 million to $416 million each year. But the cost of medical malpractice insurance to Kentucky s health care providers is only $81.8 million a year. 2 [See Figure 1] Figure 1 The Real Cost of Medical Malpractice to Kentucky s Patients and Consumers v. Kentucky s Health Care Providers 632-1,407 Preventable Deaths Due to Medical Errors Each Year $244 million - $416 million Costs Resulting from Preventable Medical Errors Each Year $81.8 million Cost of Kentucky Health Care Providers Annual Medical Malpractice Premiums Sources: Preventable deaths and costs are prorated based on population and based on estimates in To Err Is Human, Institute of Medicine, November Malpractice premiums are based on Medical Malpractice Net Premium and Incurred Loss Summary, National Association of Insurance Commissioners, July 18, Public Citizen s Congress Watch 6 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

11 Total Medical Malpractice Payouts Have Declined in Kentucky When Adjusted for Inflation Physicians and their political allies have made gloomy pronouncements suggesting that a continuous crisis in medical malpractice insurance costs is squeezing Kentucky physicians out of business. 3 In fact, statistics from the federal National Practitioner Data Bank show that annual amounts paid out by health care providers to injured patients have decreased slightly when medical inflation is taken into account. This is significant, since one half to one third of malpractice payouts customarily go toward covering medical expenses, which can be expected to rise along with the cost of medical services. 4 The amount of malpractice payouts in Kentucky declined 4.1 percent from , when adjusted for inflation. Kentucky malpractice payouts increased 24.2 percent from 1995 to 2002, or 3.5 percent annually, while the cost of medical services increased 30.5 percent, or 4.4 percent annually during these seven years. When measured in 1995 dollars, total malpractice payouts to injured patients in Kentucky declined from $38.5 million in 1995 to $36.9 million in 2002 a 4.1 percent drop. [See Figure 2] Figure 2 Total Malpractice Payouts in Kentucky, $60,000,000 $50,000,000 $40,000,000 $30,000,000 $20,000,000 $10,000,000 $0 $47,800,000 $38,500,000 $36,900, Total Malpractice payouts Adjusted for Medical Inflation (1995 dollars) Sources: National Practitioner Data Bank, Jan. 1, 1995 Dec. 31, 2002; Bureau of Labor Statistics Medical Services CPI. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 7 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

12 Median Malpractice Payouts in Kentucky Have Declined by 50 Percent Despite a belated designation by the American Medical Association as a crisis state, 5 Kentucky has consistently ranked among those states with the lowest median medical malpractice payouts to victims. Its 10-year cumulative median payout of $75,000 places it 37 th among all 50 states and the District of Columbia, according to the federal NPDB. 6 A malpractice payout is intended to provide compensation for medical care and lost income over a patient s lifetime, so median payouts can be expected to increase along with medical costs, wages and productivity, and average life expectancy. Kentucky s median malpractice payout in 2002 was only half what it was in In 1995, the median malpractice payout in Kentucky was $92,500. By 2002, the Kentucky median had declined to $47,500 a drop of 48.6 percent. [See Figure 3] The 2002 median payout for Kentucky was significantly lower than for preceding years, reflecting the unusual record of a single physician who made 76 payouts totaling $947,500. If payouts by this one physician were eliminated from the 2002 totals, Kentucky s median payout would have been $97,500 only a 5.4 percent increase since 1995 and substantially below the national average. During these same years, the cost of medical services increased 30.5 percent. $120,000 Figure 3 Median Malpractice Payouts Kentucky Health Care Providers, $100,000 $80,000 $92,500 $60,000 $40,000 $20,000 $0 $47, Sources: National Practitioner Data Bank, Jan. 1, 1995 Dec. 31, 2002; Bureau of Labor Statistics Medical Services CPI. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 8 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

13 Million-Dollar Malpractice Payouts Have Been Infrequent in Kentucky The president of Kentucky s state Senate has stated that his proposal for placing limits on noneconomic damages in malpractice cases is intended to end a lottery atmosphere in which someone wants to file a lawsuit with the possibility of hitting the big lick. 7 This comment is consistent with political rhetoric used to create the impression that multi-million dollar malpractice payouts are commonplace. In fact, statistics from the federal National Practitioner Data Bank show that mega-payouts are not common in Kentucky, nor are they increasing. In 2002, there was one less million-dollar medical malpractice payout than in There were five payouts exceeding $1 million in 2002, compared with six such payouts in (The NPDB has not yet released annual totals for 2003.) The average number of payouts of $1 million or more during the past eight years has been just 3.2 annually. [See Figure 4] Figure 4 Number of Medical Malpractive Payouts Over $1 Million in Kentucky, Source: National Practitioner Data Bank, Jan. 1, 1995 Dec. 31, Public Citizen s Congress Watch 9 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

14 Cost of Malpractice Insurance to Kentucky Health Care Providers Has Declined Slightly One half or more of medical malpractice payouts to injured patients goes to cover medical bills. And the cost of medical malpractice insurance would be expected to rise significantly over the years if payouts kept pace with wages and productivity, increased life expectancy and dramatically rising health care costs. In fact, the cost of medical liability insurance in Kentucky has risen slightly slower than medical costs, as health care professionals benefited from widespread under-pricing of insurance policies. Like much of the country, Kentucky benefited from a soft market for liability insurance throughout most of the 1990s, as insurance companies made profitable investments and chose not to raise malpractice insurance premiums. 8 As a result of these pricing and profit policies, the amounts that insurance companies collected in malpractice premiums, when adjusted for inflation, actually declined from 1995 to 2002 (the last year for which complete statistics are available). Kentucky health care providers paid less in malpractice premiums in 2002 than in 1995, when payments are adjusted for inflation. Measured in 1995 dollars, health care providers paid $62.9 million for malpractice coverage in 2002, compared with $63.4 million in [See Figure 5] This represents a 0.8 percent decrease. During these seven years, the cost of malpractice premiums increased 29 percent from $63.4 million to $81.8 million or 4.1 percent annually. During this same period, costs of medical services increased 30 percent or 4.3 percent annually. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 10 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

16 Malpractice Insurance Costs Comprise a Small Percentage of Kentucky Physician Expenses The federal government s Medicare actuary calculates that doctors spend a large amount of their practice income on their own salaries and very little for malpractice insurance. 9 The large difference between these two numbers undercuts claims that the cost of malpractice insurance is a major reason Kentucky doctors feel financial pressures. Doctors allocate far more money for their salaries than they pay in malpractice premiums. According to the federal government s Medicare program, doctors nationally spend an average of 63.4 percent of their practice incomes on their own salaries, 33.4 percent on such overhead as office payroll and rent, and only 3.2 percent of their practice incomes on malpractice insurance. 10 [See Figure 6] Kentucky doctors spend less than the national average for medical malpractice insurance. According to the federal government s Medicare program, Kentucky doctors spend an average of only 2.8 percent of their practice incomes on malpractice insurance, compared with a nationwide average of 3.2 percent. 11 This means Kentucky doctors pay 12.5 percent less than the national average. Figure 6 Where Doctor s Practice Income Goes 70% 60% 63.4% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Doctor's Earnings 17.0% 5.8% Office Payroll Office Space Malpractice Premiums 3.2% 2.8% Kentucky Premuims (Adjusted by CMS) Sources: Medical Economics Magazine Oct. 25, 1999; Office of the Actuary, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Public Citizen s Congress Watch 12 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

17 Claims about Doctors Abandoning Kentucky Are Contradicted by Official Data Doctors are under intense pressure today from declining government and private sector payment rates, increased control over health care by HMOs and other managed care companies and loss of control over their personal time because of work demands. Yet, those who advocate a Kentucky constitutional amendment authorizing caps on non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases have relied on well-publicized anecdotes to bolster a perception that insurance costs are the primary reasons doctors stop practicing. 12 Government statistics, however, show that the number of doctors in Kentucky has not changed dramatically especially not in rural counties. From 2000 to 2002, Kentucky had a decline of only 19 physicians and the loss was felt in urban areas, not rural counties. The Kentucky Medical Association has publicly claimed that Kentucky lost 819 practicing doctors during the two years ending in Official demographic statistics compiled by the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure show that there were 8,911 licensed physicians working in Kentucky in 2000, and 8,892 physicians in 2002 a difference of only 19 doctors. Furthermore, there was a decrease of 214 doctors in the populated counties of Jefferson and Fayette during those two years indicating the small decline occurred in urban areas, not in rural areas where access to doctors is a more critical issue. 14 Kentucky s statistics are reinforced by a General Accounting Office (GAO) report about so-called medical malpractice crisis states. A study released in August 2003 by the GAO essentially found that the American Medical Association and other medical-provider groups manufactured a crisis in health care access. The GAO study cited inaccurate reports from a number of states regarding the number of practices that had closed and the number of doctors who had departed. Survey data used [by AMA] to identify service cutbacks in response to physician concerns about malpractice pressures are not likely representative of the actions taken by all physicians, the GAO concluded. 15 [See later section of this report, Congressional Watchdog Agency Finds Claim of Malpractice Insurance Crisis Unsubstantiated ] Public Citizen s Congress Watch 13 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

18 Ratio of Doctors to Residents Has Increased Faster in Kentucky than in Neighboring States Data compiled by the American Medical Association indicates the ratio of doctors-to-residents has grown steadily in Kentucky and its growth has been greater than in neighboring states, including those that impose caps on malpractice payouts. From 1985 to 2001, the ratio of physicians per 1,000 Kentucky residents rose from 1.62 to 2.33 a 43.8 growth in this measurement of the prevalence of doctors. In comparison, during the same period this measurement increased at a slower rate in four neighboring states, some of which have enacted caps on malpractice damage awards. [See Figure 7] Growth rates for the ratios in neighboring states include 28.2 percent in Missouri, which has a $465,000 cap (adjusted annually) on non-economic damages; 34.2 percent in Ohio, where caps have not had time to influence conditions; 40.7 percent in Tennessee, which has no caps; and 43.6 percent in Indiana, which has an overall cap of $1.25 million on all malpractice awards. Figure 7 Physician/Population Ratios for Kentucky and Neighboring States, Physicians Per 1,000 Population Year Kentucky (No Caps) Indiana (Caps) Tennessee (No Caps) Ohio Missouri (Caps) Percent Change % +43.6% +40.7% +34.2% +28.2% Source: American Medical Association, Nonfederal Civilian Population, and Physician/Population Ratios for Selected Years , table 5.17 from Physician Characteristics and Distribution in the U.S., and prior editions. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 14 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

19 Five Percent of Doctors Are Responsible for Half of Kentucky Medical Malpractice Payouts The insurance and medical communities have argued that medical malpractice litigation constitutes a giant lottery, in which lawsuits are purely random events bearing no relationship to the care given by a physician. If the tort system is a lottery, it is clearly a rigged one, because some numbers come up more often than others. A small percentage of doctors have attracted multiple claims, and it is these doctors who are responsible for much of the malpractice in Kentucky. According to the federal government s National Practitioner Data Bank, just 4.7 percent of Kentucky s doctors have been responsible for 49.9 percent of all malpractice payouts to patients. [See Figure 8] Overall, these 411 doctors, all of whom have made two or more payouts, have paid $171.9 million in damages. Even more surprising, just 1.6 percent of Kentucky doctors (141), each of whom has paid three or more malpractice claims, were responsible for 26.7 percent of all payouts. The 25 doctors with five or more payouts, just 0.3 percent of all Kentucky doctors, account for 11.4 percent of all payouts percent of Kentucky doctors have not made a medical malpractice payout since September 1990, when the NPDB was created. Figure 8 Number of Medical Malpractice Payouts to Patients and Amounts Paid by Kentucky Doctors, Sept. 1, 1990-Sept. 30, 2003 Number of Payout Reports Number of Doctors Who Made Payouts Total Number of Payouts Percent/Total Doctors (8,714)* Percent of Total Number of Payouts Total Amount of Payouts All 1,450 2, % 100.0% $375,597, ,039 1, % 50.1% $203,743,100 2 or more 411 1, % 49.9% $171,854,000 3 or more % 26.7% $76,429,750 4 or more % 16.1% $36,896,000 5 or more % 11.4% $22,157,500 Source: National Practitioner Data Bank, Sept. 1, 1990 Dec. 31, * Based on number of physicians in Kentucky in 1997, the midpoint of the time period studied, as reported by the American Medical Association. Public Citizen s Congress Watch 15 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

20 Doctors with Repeated Malpractice Claims Against Them Suffer Few Consequences The Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure and the state s health care providers have done little to rein in those doctors who repeatedly make medical errors and commit medical negligence. According to the National Practitioner Data Bank and Public Citizen s analysis of NPDB data, disciplinary actions (license suspension or revocation, or a limit on clinical privileges) have been few and far between for Kentucky physicians. [See Figure 9] Only 9.9 percent (41 of 411) of Kentucky doctors who made two or more malpractice payouts were disciplined by the Board. Only 12 percent (17 of 141) of Kentucky doctors who made three or more malpractice payouts were disciplined by the Board. Only 20 percent (11 of 55) of Kentucky doctors who made four or more malpractice payouts were disciplined by the Board. Only 24 percent (6 of 25) of Kentucky doctors who made five or more malpractice payouts were disciplined by the Board. Figure 9 Number of Kentucky Doctors with Two or More Medical Malpractice Payouts Who Have Been Disciplined (Reportable Licensure Actions), Number of Payout Reports Number of Doctors Who Made Payouts Number of Doctors with One or More Reportable Licensure Actions Percent of Doctors with One or More Reportable Licensure Actions 2 or more % 3 or more % 4 or more % 5 or more % 10 or more % Source: National Practitioner Data Bank, Sept. 1, 1990 Dec. 31, Public Citizen s Congress Watch 16 Medical Malpractice in Kentucky

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